The Geographical Distribution of Animals: With a Study of the Relations of Living and Extinct Faunas as Elucidating the Past Changes of the Earth's Surface, 1. köideHafner Publishing Company, 1962 |
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Page 139
... perhaps palmated , the second pair above the eyes , while the third and smallest stood out sideways on the snout . They had enormous upper canines , of which the roots entered the middle horn cores , no upper incisors , and small molars ...
... perhaps palmated , the second pair above the eyes , while the third and smallest stood out sideways on the snout . They had enormous upper canines , of which the roots entered the middle horn cores , no upper incisors , and small molars ...
Page 162
... Perhaps the most interesting of these extinct birds are , however , the flamingoes , represented by forms hardly distin- guishable from living species , and by one extinct genus Palæ- lodus , which had very long toes , and probably ...
... Perhaps the most interesting of these extinct birds are , however , the flamingoes , represented by forms hardly distin- guishable from living species , and by one extinct genus Palæ- lodus , which had very long toes , and probably ...
Page 399
... Perhaps a more important con- sideration is , that Didelphys is a family type unknown in Aus- tralia ; and this implies that the point of common origin is very remote in geological time . But the most conclusive fact is that in the ...
... Perhaps a more important con- sideration is , that Didelphys is a family type unknown in Aus- tralia ; and this implies that the point of common origin is very remote in geological time . But the most conclusive fact is that in the ...
Contents
CHAPTER II | 10 |
Means of Dispersal of Mammalia p 10Climate as a Limit to the Range | 17 |
CHAPTER III | 35 |
Copyright | |
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absence abundant Abyssinia affinities Africa and Madagascar allied Amphibia animals antelopes arctic Asia Austral Australia Australian region Austro-Malaya beetles belong birds Borneo Burmah Carnivora Celebes Central Ceylon characteristic China climate Coleoptera confined Cosmopolite Cosmopolite Cosmopolite deposits distribution east Eastern Hemisphere Eocene epoch Ethiop Ethiopian Ethiopian region Europe European excl existing extend extinct fauna forests genera genus geographical globe groups Guinea Himalayas hyænas India Indo-Malay inhabit Insectivora insects Japan Java land land-birds large number less lizards Madagascar Malacca Malay Malaya Malayan mammalia migration Miocene Miocene period Moluccas mountains Nearctic Neotropical North northern occur ocean Oriental genus Oriental region Palearctic Palearctic region Papuan peculiar forms peculiar genera peculiar genus peculiar species perhaps Pliocene possesses Post-Pliocene probably range recent regions but Australian remarkable represented reptiles rhinoceros South America southern sub-region Sumatra Tasmania temperate Tertiary Thibet Timor Tropical Africa tropical regions types whole region wholly Zealand zoological regions